It's a push press not a strict press. Done pelrrpoy, there shouldn't be a lot of strain put on your neck because your shoulders and traps don't do much for the first 1/3rd of the press. Try it and you'll see what I mean. This exercise is responsible for a lot of pro strongmen and olympic lifters developing ungodly shoulder strength. Way different than press/push press from rack position.

Bookmarks are somewhat like registers in that they record positions you can jump to. Unlike registers, they have long names, and they persist automatically from one Emacs session to the next. The prototypical use of bookmarks is to record “where you were reading” in various files.

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== Usage ==

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*C-x r m <RET> Set the bookmark for the visited file, at point.

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*C-x r m bookmark <RET> Set the bookmark named bookmark at point (bookmark-set).

*M-x bookmark-save Save all the current bookmark values in the default bookmark file.

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== Customizations ==

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=== Changing the default bookmarks-file ===

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By default, bookmarks are saved to the file {{Filename|.emacs.bmk}}, outside of your {{Dirname|~/.emacs.d}} directory. To change this to another file, set the variable {{Variable|bookmark-default-file}} to what you like:

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<syntaxhighlight lang="lisp">

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(setq bookmark-default-file "~/.emacs.d/bookmarks")

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</syntaxhighlight>

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[[Category:Utilities]]

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[[Category:Bookmarks]]

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[[Category:Built-in Package]]

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[[ Category:File Navigation]]

Revision as of 03:45, 19 October 2013

Bookmarks are somewhat like registers in that they record positions you can jump to. Unlike registers, they have long names, and they persist automatically from one Emacs session to the next. The prototypical use of bookmarks is to record “where you were reading” in various files.

Usage

C-x r m <RET> Set the bookmark for the visited file, at point.

C-x r m bookmark <RET> Set the bookmark named bookmark at point (bookmark-set).